Challenges discussion
List of THE books to read for each President
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Mike
(new)
Jan 15, 2015 07:45AM

reply
|
flag

http://bestpresidentialbios.com/
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/t...
But I'm all for pre-picking the books.


I know I'm going with the McCullough John Adams not because of the book itself but because McCullough has such a stellar reputation.

McCullough also has the greatest voice. I love when he narrates Ken Burns' docs! I am all for reading his John Adams next if the rest of the gang agrees.

Jefferson - either Joseph Ellis's American Sphinx or Meacham's The Art of Power
Madison - either Ralph Ketchum's or Richard Brookheiser's (both of which are just named James Madison. Way to be creative, guys!)
James Monroe - The Last Founding Father by Harlow Ungar or Ammon's Monroe: The Quest for National Identity
There's a few more options to pick from, especially when it comes to Jefferson, but I thought it might worth thinking about what's ahead. Do we want to try to read the definitive bios? Or just read the ones that seem most interesting to us as a group? What I'm noticing is that for some of them, the "definitive" bios are rather old and either massive or sound pretty dry (or perhaps a bit of both!)
So let me know what the rest of you think. I'm really enjoying the conversation so far and looking forward to more to come!

Im currently reading Lynne Cheney's Madison book and its fine, I read a book about Alexander Hamilton by Brookhiser and somehow he made Hamilton boring and I don't know how Hamilton could be boring. I also read Dolley by Rita Mae Brown it was more of a fictionalized account of the the war of 1812, but I enjoyed it while I waited for the Madison book to arrive in the mail.
The Unger book was on my list for Monroe and I was thinking about reading Meacham's Jefferson book since I wasn't satisfied with the American Sphinx
I have been collecting biographies through a book swap, so I may not always be reading the same book as everyone else. Hope that's okay. Personally, I've been picking bios from a Washington Post list and making sure they have at least 400 pages.

Is this the Post list you were referring to?
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/t...
I've been using that as well to try to make some choices. But as I mentioned, some of what they suggest seems a little old, daunting. Not that big and old is bad, of course!






From what I have seen in reviews and book details, Peskin's biography is much more thorough and academic, but Millard's book is better in terms of narrative and popular interest.


https://www.barnesandnoble.com/blog/i...
There are some on the list I like, some I don't, and some I want to check out. Their paragraphs of reasons for the choices may help others decide if they want to give any of these a try.


It will not show recent releases like Chernow's new Grant book, so that is when a more contemporary list can be useful. The list does come from a bookseller, but anyone wanting to read biographies has already decided they are looking for a book, so the motivations match. The list includes material from the 1950s to the present day, so they are not just hawking the stuff they are bound to have in stock.

This is a great book!

Mike wrote: "Have you read any from the Post list yet? I've read a few, Team of Rivals and the Garfield book. Maybe we can use that to build a reading list?"
Your comment is the first I've read that Doris Kearns Goodwin was accused of plagiarism. I immediately did some online research on reliable sites and you are correct. This makes me very sad. I've always considered her a rock star. Being a good human is a difficult task as we all know. I have a book on my TBR, "Monsters: A Fan's Dilemma" by Claire Dederer. I'll need to read it soon. This has been a terrible shock. (I'll never consider Kearns a monster in spite of this book's title.) I'm hoping it was a one time mistake. I've met her and she is a sweet lady.

"And there was Light" by Meacham is a good read and a great analysis of him as an American icon. It doesn't get into the weeds on everything like his early life or law career but it does a great job of defending him from both the right and from the left, both of which have attacked him in recent years.

I, too, entered this rabbit hole via BestPresidentialBios.com I use his list and rating system to determine which books to choose from.

Welcome, Michael! I'm currently taking my second turn with Calvin Coolidge, via Amity Shlaes. Great book!
